| Literature DB >> 34306233 |
Priyanka Satish1, Aditya Khetan2, Dharav Shah3, Subhashini Ganesan4, Rojith Balakrishnan5, Shuba Srinivasan6, Reema Samuel7, Leland Hull8,9, Richard A Josephson10.
Abstract
Globally, India is the second largest consumer of tobacco. However, Indian medical students do not receive adequate training in smoking cessation counseling. Each patient hospitalization is an opportunity to counsel smokers. Medical Student Counseling for Hospitalized patients Addicted to Tobacco (MS-CHAT) is a 2-arm multicenter randomized controlled trial (RCT) that compares the effectiveness of a medical student-guided smoking cessation program initiated in inpatients and continued for two months after discharge versus standard hospital practice. Current smokers admitted to the hospital are randomized to receive either usual care or the intervention. The intervention group receives inpatient counseling and longitudinal postdischarge telephone follow-up by medical students. The control group receives counseling at the discretion of the treating physician. The primary outcome is biochemically verified 7-day point prevalence of smoking cessation at 6 months after enrollment. Changes in medical student knowledge and attitude will also be studied using a pre- and postquestionnaire delivered prior to and 12 months after training. This trial tests a unique model that seeks to provide hands-on experience in smoking cessation counseling to medical students while simultaneously improving cessation outcomes among hospitalized smokers in India.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34306233 PMCID: PMC8279210 DOI: 10.1155/2021/6682408
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Smok Cessat ISSN: 1834-2612
Definitions.
| 7-day quit rate: defined as the patient's self-reported smoking behavior in the last 7 days. Assessed as “Have you refrained from smoking during the past seven days, and not smoked even one puff?” |
| Continuous abstinence: defined as being abstinent from smoking for at least the prior 90 days. Patients will be asked to specify quit date or number of weeks/months since quitting. |
| Biochemical testing: breath carbon monoxide < 10 PPM constitutes a verified successful quit attempt. |
| Previous quit attempt: a 24-hour quit attempt in the past 12 months. |
Figure 1Location of study sites in India.
Figure 2Structure of study.
Planned secondary outcomes.
| Patient outcomes: |
| (i) Biochemically verified 90-day quit rate, measured 6 months after enrollment. |
| Medical student outcomes: |
| (i) Pre-post analysis of medical student knowledge about counseling techniques and pharmacotherapy before, 6 weeks, and 12 months after training. |
Planned descriptive outcomes.
| Descriptive outcomes: |